Preparing for ConLaw Exam?

Does anyone have effective tips for studying for a Con Law final? I'm having trouble figuring out the best way to organize my outline so it will be useful on an exam. I've tried discussing the material with classmates, but it seems like even the studious ones are as lost as I am in there because our Prof isn't very good and neither is the text book. I have Chemerinsky's hornbook and it has been very helpful, but I've found doing hypos in the E&Es to be the most effective studying method for my other classes. I hear its not so good for understanding Con law though, so any other suggestions? Also, my prof only has one old exam posted for us to look at (of course), so is the best thing to just use old Con Law exams from other professors at my school? Any help would be much appreciated, thanks!

OP - although the Chereminsky and E&E were nice to read along with during the semester, they don't seem quite right to "bring it all together" here at the end. Personally, i've found the Emanuel ConLaw outline very useful. Obviously, it's not as detailed on certain areas as my professor has drilled down into the various topics, but it provides a great general baseline framework into which i'm able to input all of the more specific notes i've taken in class.

Thanks for the input. I attended a BarBri lecture for Con Law that helped put things in a "big picture" context and really helped my understanding and (I hope) the effectiveness of my outline. I was thinking about picking up the Lexis Q&A for Con Law to practice. Anyone know anything about that book or have suggestions for a better one?

Thanks for the input. I attended a BarBri lecture for Con Law that helped put things in a "big picture" context and really helped my understanding and (I hope) the effectiveness of my outline. I was thinking about picking up the Lexis Q&A for Con Law to practice. Anyone know anything about that book or have suggestions for a better one?

I would go back and look at the major cases - Lopez, Morrison, Printz...I have found that once you find the big picture, reviewing the cases fine tunes everything.